Welcome to my outsourced services blog. I've developed this blog to share my expertise developed over my 25+ years of sales experience in the communications industry involving phone billing and services,call centers,IT solutions, cloud services, social media,and various other services

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Sunday, February 23, 2014

Having worked in Channel Sales for 20+ years, I have had
many varied experiences with my Channel Partners.I have seen people produce many, many thousands of dollars in sales, consistently
year after year and make tons of money with my programs.I have also seen the opposite end of the scale,
Channel Partners who sign a marketing agreement and either never produce a single sale,
or close but a few sales over the years.

So what is it in a Channel Sales group that drives an “Independent
Sales Agent” to use one supplier over another?I have my ideas which I try to run with faithfully with my team of
Agents, but I’m really curious what you think?

The most important item I have found over the years,
required to even get an Agent on board, is a good, meaningful Product.Without a marketable product, there’s no
reason to sign an agency agreement in the first place.So let’s assume for this discussion we have a
great product…….

A good Channel Team will drive more sales

After product, IMO, Responsiveness
is the next most important reason to choose one supplier over another.If an Agent sends in a quote request, and has
it returned within the same day, they have a GREAT Supplier to work with.As the time to return a quote extends itself,
it exponentially reduces the opportunity to close a sale.I’ve heard of sales agents waiting days to
get sales quotes, only to be told when they do present it to the customer, the
prospect has already selected another vendor and has an install date scheduled……..ouch!

(As this is my #1 important trait, for the record, my team at Granite Telecom turns simple, non-complex quotes around in 24 hours or less)

Relationship is a
vital cog in any partnership.I try to
be as involved in my agents sales efforts as possible and do my best to contact
them at a minimum, once every 3 weeks by phone or email, with in person visits
every 6 months.Covering the entire United
States and Canada, visiting even this often is a challenge.For more regional reps, a monthly stop by
would be great to cultivate the relationship with your Channel Partner.

Customer Experience
or Service runs a close 4th.If your company can provide a top notch
customer experience to the sales agent’s customers, you’ll have a better
retention rate, meaning long term residuals, which is the name of the game in
agency sales.

I have loads of other components I think fit in somewhere,
just not sure where to list them?There’s
“financial stability of your company”, “price”, “sales ability”, “promotions”, “SPIF’s”,
“commissions”, “flexibility” and many more……

I’d enjoy hearing your thoughts on how these components line
up when you’re choosing a supplier…..maybe all of my fellow Channel Managers can
learn a thing or two from our sales agents?

Sunday, February 16, 2014

I hear the comments every day…..”You won’t believe what
happened to me yesterday!”…. “I waited
almost 40 minutes to get through” ….”You’d think they’d hire more people to answer
the phones”….” I can’t believe I waited that long only to get transferred”…”That’s
the last time. I’m moving my business”.....… and so on.

Hold times can last up to 13 minutes

Granted, working in the communications industry, I might be
exposed to more of the complaints than the average worker but it is certainly a
sore spot when someone has a poor experience with a company’s customer service
organization.

We’ve all made that dreaded call during our lunch hour to
try and ask a question about something, maybe your cell phone, your cable bill,
insurance bill, or even in the worst cases, the calls to file for unemployment
benefits or Cobra insurance coverage.I
personally have had loads of these experiences, with some hold times exceeding
an hour.And that is FRUSTRATING.

Take a look at a couple of these examples of hold times from CBC News…..

Shocking, huh?Not
really.I actually would argue that the time to get a resolution is actually longer.How many times do you get transferred and put
back into the queue?Something to think
about?

We each have tolerances in our business in order to balance
operating costs with customer satisfaction.The discussion here is what level of hold time are you willing to accept
before you start losing customers?And
as hold time goes up, you WILL LOSE
customers.That’s a fact.

I have seen many statistics pop up over the years to measure
hold time. “ATA” or “Average Time of Answer”, “AHT” or “Average Hold Time”, “TIQ”
or “Time in Queue” are just a few that come to mind.I actually use this statistic as a major
selling point.My feeling is providing a
service with little or no hold time presents a professional solution and
portrays a service orientated company.If the operations of a firm are designed around short hold times, it
means the company cares about its customers and will go to any means necessary
to deliver a first class customer experience.This is the type of company where I want my business to go.

Where do you put your business and why? Do you think hold time affects customer retention rates? Let’s find out what we all think…….

…….And just for the record, my company, Granite
Telecommunications, answers all customer
service calls with a live person on average in less than 8 seconds 24x7x365……..